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jason.blunderfield@wlt.com  
#1 Posted : 21 May 2021 10:21:38(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
jason.blunderfield@wlt.com

Looking to rewrite our new and expectant mothers colateral and have been asked to consider making it gender nutral. Anyone else tackeled this challenge yet and have suggestions on how to word it?

New and Expectant Employee doesnt seem to work to well in my view.

Roundtuit  
#2 Posted : 21 May 2021 10:45:37(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

HSE law refers to new & expectant mothers.

A managment systems auditor would expect to find the matter of new and expectant mothers addressed.

Tell the wokes to find something constructive to do.

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Roundtuit  
#3 Posted : 21 May 2021 10:45:37(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

HSE law refers to new & expectant mothers.

A managment systems auditor would expect to find the matter of new and expectant mothers addressed.

Tell the wokes to find something constructive to do.

thanks 8 users thanked Roundtuit for this useful post.
Dazzling Puddock on 21/05/2021(UTC), N Hancock on 24/05/2021(UTC), Swygart25604 on 24/05/2021(UTC), Adams29600 on 27/05/2021(UTC), Dazzling Puddock on 21/05/2021(UTC), N Hancock on 24/05/2021(UTC), Swygart25604 on 24/05/2021(UTC), Adams29600 on 27/05/2021(UTC)
MrBrightside  
#4 Posted : 21 May 2021 10:47:46(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
MrBrightside

I think you might be opening up a can of worms with this one.

The HSE still refer to New and Expectant Mothers I would be tempted not to change it. However if you feel it needs to be changed you could just swap mothers for person.

A Kurdziel  
#5 Posted : 21 May 2021 11:02:17(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

I was reviewing the Electrical Safety Policy recently and I quoted the regs which describe the person working with electricity as “him” . As it was a direct quote, I left it as it was. When not quoting  I have always used him/her but that might not be enough with some people preferring them or it.  I have decided that I wish to be referred to as ^¯ which sums up my orientation in life: confused  and slightly bored of it all.

CptBeaky  
#6 Posted : 21 May 2021 11:27:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
CptBeaky

New and expectant parent/person should do it. He/she/her/him can always be replaced with they/them in any policy. We use gender neutral all the time, we only notice it when it is pointed out to us. When you find a dog in the street you would wonder where "their" owner is, you would not assume a gender for the dog. And you would ask where "they" (the owner)is, and hope to return the dog to "them", again not assuming a gender for the owner.

That being said, pregnancy is a very specific biological condition, and as such my best friend (who is female to male trans) said that he wouldn't find it offensive if the wording for the policy was sex specific, as long as the personalised risk assessment was specfic to his gender indentity, which i feel is not too much to ask. The was brought up a couple of years ago, and I asked him then.

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Kate  
#7 Posted : 21 May 2021 11:43:08(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

New and expectant mothers in this context are anyone who has recently given birth or who is pregnant.  

The things that apply to such people do not all apply to someone else who might be described as a new or expectant parent, for example if they are the other parent or an adoptive parent.  Some of them apply but not all.

For absolute clarity it probably makes sense to talk about birth and pregnancy when this is what is meant rather than motherhood which is a more nebulous concept.

Roundtuit  
#8 Posted : 21 May 2021 11:54:10(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

Isn't Dog gender specific given it is the ..... that gives birth to the puppies?

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Roundtuit  
#9 Posted : 21 May 2021 11:54:10(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

Isn't Dog gender specific given it is the ..... that gives birth to the puppies?

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CptBeaky  
#10 Posted : 21 May 2021 11:59:31(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
CptBeaky

Originally Posted by: Roundtuit Go to Quoted Post

Isn't Dog gender specific given it is the ..... that gives birth to the puppies?

There is a debate over it. In breeding circles male dogs are refered to as studs or sires, depending on whether they have bred yet or not. That being said, I probably could have gone for a better example :)

Dazzling Puddock  
#11 Posted : 21 May 2021 12:18:42(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Dazzling Puddock

Originally Posted by: MrBrightside Go to Quoted Post

I think you might be opening up a can of worms with this one.

The HSE still refer to New and Expectant Mothers I would be tempted not to change it. However if you feel it needs to be changed you could just swap mothers for person.

A new person would be the baby!

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Kate on 21/05/2021(UTC)
Roundtuit  
#12 Posted : 21 May 2021 12:25:40(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

Love to see a French version of such a re-write given they are legislating against gender neutral vocabulary.

Roundtuit  
#13 Posted : 21 May 2021 12:25:40(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

Love to see a French version of such a re-write given they are legislating against gender neutral vocabulary.

biker1  
#14 Posted : 21 May 2021 13:31:36(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
biker1

For goodness sake! Why does it have to gender neutral? Unless male pregnancy has suddently become an option, I really don't see the point in this. If someone has transferred their sex, surely they would then become 'she or her' when it comes to pregnancy? Another example of political correctness gone mad.

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Dazzling Puddock  
#15 Posted : 21 May 2021 13:40:25(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Dazzling Puddock

Originally Posted by: biker1 Go to Quoted Post

For goodness sake! Why does it have to gender neutral? Unless male pregnancy has suddently become an option, I really don't see the point in this. If someone has transferred their sex, surely they would then become 'she or her' when it comes to pregnancy? Another example of political correctness gone mad.

A male to female transition without surgery can easily lead to a pregnant person who identifies as a man!!

He would be pregnant and he would give birth!

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Kate on 21/05/2021(UTC), shaunosborne on 24/05/2021(UTC)
Kate  
#16 Posted : 21 May 2021 13:42:44(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

I think you meant female to male ...

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Dazzling Puddock on 21/05/2021(UTC)
Dazzling Puddock  
#17 Posted : 21 May 2021 13:45:16(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Dazzling Puddock

Originally Posted by: Dazzling Puddock Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: biker1 Go to Quoted Post

For goodness sake! Why does it have to gender neutral? Unless male pregnancy has suddently become an option, I really don't see the point in this. If someone has transferred their sex, surely they would then become 'she or her' when it comes to pregnancy? Another example of political correctness gone mad.

A male to female transition without surgery can easily lead to a pregnant person who identifies as a man!!

He would be pregnant and he would give birth!

That should read female to male obviously!!
jason.blunderfield@wlt.com  
#18 Posted : 21 May 2021 14:30:33(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
jason.blunderfield@wlt.com

Whilst I understand the UK legislation and HSE refers to it as new and expectant mother but my organisations policy does not necessarily need to reflect that especailly as it operates in multipul coountries.

In adjusting it to new and expectant person (or employee) could be interprited as a new employee joining the business.

There are some really helpful thoughts on here but I am thinking of using the term pregnant person or new parent.

Most certianly can strip gender related questions and terms out of the policy, risk assessment template and guidance notes. 

peter gotch  
#19 Posted : 21 May 2021 15:13:13(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Jason

Whilst recognising that you are working in multiple geographies in the UK and other places where the relevant legislation is largely derived from the British model, the relevant Interpretion Act says that the word "he" (and any variant, i.e. his, him) includes the opposite sex EXCEPT where this is clearly not what is intended.

So, however "inclusive" we want to be the expression "new and expectant mothers" is OK by me and I imagine that if the general consensus was not that this is true, HSE would have been swamped with complaints about the sexist nature of its guidance. As far as I am aware this has NOT happened.

It's a straightforward recognition of biological differences between sexes. 

For everything else I have tended to default to variants of "they" for decades. It's simple and becomes a habit.

A day or so ago, I was pondering on using the phrase "call a spade a spade" rather than e.g. "tell it like it is" which doesn't have the same ring, when I pondered as to whether someone might consider this racist. So I checked the origin of the expression.

It's ascribed to Erasmus when he was translating from Ancient Greek into Roman in 1542. Seems that even then he was being politically correct as in the Ancient Greek it might have been "call a fig a fig" which could be considered to be a double entendre. But the literary experts seem fairly much agreed that a "spade" was a tool for digging the ground with no unsavoury connotations. 

Of course, discrimination was alive and well in 1542 but it tended to be about those with resources making sure that they kept them (and usually increased them) at the expense of those with less, whatever their sex or racial origin. 

There were tyrants and "The Haves" of various colours in the 16th Century. There were also "The Have Nots" of various colours.

Messey  
#20 Posted : 21 May 2021 17:48:22(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Messey

I do struggle with all this "I identify as..." concept.

If I am born a man and now identify as a woman, this change is catered for (in part) by gender neutrality becoming the norm (such as employers insisting on terms such as ‘pregnant people’).

However, If I was born ‘Fred Smith’ but now identify as ‘Horatio Nelson’, will my employer allow me to wear a bicorn hat in the office and type with one arm? - I doubt it!

How does that work????

Kate  
#21 Posted : 23 May 2021 12:18:12(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

"Expectant person" doesn't work either because it doesn't tell you what the person may be expecting.  "Expectant mother" at least tells you that they are expecting to have a baby.  There are many things that a person may expect and a baby may not be one of them!

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A Kurdziel on 24/05/2021(UTC), aud on 27/05/2021(UTC), Connor35037 on 28/05/2021(UTC), Messey on 28/05/2021(UTC), Roundtuit on 02/06/2021(UTC)
Kate  
#22 Posted : 23 May 2021 12:22:23(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

"New or expectant parent" doesn't work because it can refer to someone who hasn't given birth and isn't pregnant, such as a conventional father.  You aren't going to apply the protections due to someone who is pregnant or has just given birth to someone whose wife is the one that is pregnant or has just given birth, although he may be just as much an expectant or new parent as she is.

Edited by user 23 May 2021 12:25:30(UTC)  | Reason: to include "new" parent

peter gotch  
#23 Posted : 23 May 2021 12:40:46(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

Kate - to be more politically correct, you could perhaps have written "partner" instead of "wife". That would allow for the expectant mother who has not married, or with a little stretch of the imagination the notional partner or partners if the mother is carrying a surrogate child.

But whatever, the key point, as you indicate, is that the protections are there for biological reasons.

Roundtuit  
#24 Posted : 23 May 2021 12:56:38(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

operating biological human incubator?

Factually correct, totally demeaning and precisley what happens when you try and pander.

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Roundtuit  
#25 Posted : 23 May 2021 12:56:38(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

operating biological human incubator?

Factually correct, totally demeaning and precisley what happens when you try and pander.

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shaunosborne  
#26 Posted : 24 May 2021 08:09:52(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
shaunosborne

I understand people like to get worked up about these things, but I personally feel it really isn't that difficult to adapt your language, and it could make all the difference to someone.

For example, when delivering a first aid course I would always refer to a 'pregnant person' and make the point that people other than those presenting as a woman could be pregnant, because this could be an area of dangerous ignorance for a first aider. 

In this case could the risk assessment simply refer to "recent childbirth or pregnancy" and still serve the same purpose?

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CptBeaky on 24/05/2021(UTC), Kate on 24/05/2021(UTC)
CptBeaky  
#27 Posted : 24 May 2021 08:21:54(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
CptBeaky

Originally Posted by: Messey Go to Quoted Post

However, If I was born ‘Fred Smith’ but now identify as ‘Horatio Nelson’, will my employer allow me to wear a bicorn hat in the office and type with one arm? - I doubt it!

If you truly believe you are Horatio Nelson, and it doesn't affect your ability to do your job, then do as you please. I would call you Horatio, and I would respect your rights to hold the belief that you are Haratio Nelson. The only time I would call you out on it is were you to use it as an excuse to invade Russia. Your right to swing your fist stops where my nose begins. It really isn't that hard to understand.

A person who is trans does not want special treatment, they only want equal treatment. Considering that we are meant to live in a society that has equal rights for men and women, it means that no matter how you identify you rights should not change.

I always look at it as similar to when you are introduced to a "William". Quite often they will go by a shortened version of that name, Bill, Billy, Willy etc. You don't keep calling them William anyway, you use their preferred name. It is just the polite thing to do.

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shaunosborne on 24/05/2021(UTC)
A Kurdziel  
#28 Posted : 24 May 2021 08:29:00(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
A Kurdziel

“discrimination was alive and well in 1542” and the main target in Western Europe were Anabaptists, who had their own take on personal pronouns, amongst other things. The approach to H&S was a bit more “flexible”  and the main HR processes revolved around which whip you should use to keep your servants suitably chastised: happy days?

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shaunosborne on 24/05/2021(UTC)
stevedm  
#29 Posted : 24 May 2021 08:29:06(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
stevedm

Perhaps instead of looking exclusively at gender nuetral wording you need to be looking at inclusive wording...respect is the main thing here for any person, and choosing to include the phrases speaks more about understanding and respect for that person than making the wording neutral...it isn't pandering but respect for individual and thier choices...using the approriate wording is more important...so you can use mothers where it is appropriate to use..

You probably already have this link but worth another read perhaps..?

https://www.un.org/en/gender-inclusive-language/guidelines.shtml

peter gotch  
#30 Posted : 24 May 2021 10:33:34(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

AK - a long line of Anabaptists and Baptists in my heritage (inclusive of the Gotches of Kettering) but to be honest they were not at the forefront of my mind in my comment about discrimination in 1542! 

Adams29600  
#31 Posted : 27 May 2021 13:15:18(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Adams29600

I reckon, in line with the description in the legislation that "New and/or expectant mother" describes the situation in a manner understood by all regardless of what they are or identify as or how offended they choose to be. 

As Monty Python said - this is all getting extremely silly.

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SLord80 on 01/06/2021(UTC)
Bazzer  
#32 Posted : 28 May 2021 15:56:59(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Bazzer

New and expectant mothers, is good enough for me; I have just reviewed a client's procedures, and let it as this.

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Messey on 28/05/2021(UTC), SLord80 on 01/06/2021(UTC)
Messey  
#33 Posted : 28 May 2021 19:08:12(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Messey

Originally Posted by: Bazzer Go to Quoted Post

New and expectant mothers, is good enough for me; I have just reviewed a client's procedures, and let it as this.

Well done Bazzer. Thank God common sense has been restored around here

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SLord80 on 01/06/2021(UTC)
DawidGrr  
#34 Posted : 01 June 2021 14:43:39(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
DawidGrr

I'm 58yo and don't understand the purpose of gender-neutral wording. It's so wrong.

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SLord80 on 01/06/2021(UTC)
CptBeaky  
#35 Posted : 02 June 2021 07:16:20(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
CptBeaky

You not understanding it, you being 58, and it being wrong are all not connected. An argument from ignorance is a logical fallacy.

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Kate on 02/06/2021(UTC), Wailes900134 on 02/06/2021(UTC)
Messy  
#36 Posted : 02 June 2021 10:49:20(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Messy

Originally Posted by: CptBeaky Go to Quoted Post
You not understanding it, you being 58, and it being wrong are all not connected. An argument from ignorance is a logical fallacy.
So having a personal opinion isn't allowed in this brave new world? Or maybe only if they match yours? Thats a rather sad situation 😕
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Sharpe23621 on 02/06/2021(UTC)
Kate  
#37 Posted : 02 June 2021 10:50:56(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Kate

If you don't understand the purpose of something, how can you deduce that it is wrong?

CptBeaky  
#38 Posted : 02 June 2021 11:03:53(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
CptBeaky

Originally Posted by: Messy Go to Quoted Post
So having a personal opinion isn't allowed in this brave new world? Or maybe only if they match yours? Thats a rather sad situation 😕

Saying something is wrong because you don't understand it is a logical fallacy. I don't understand rocket science, we still send people to the moon. I don't understand astrology, we still have no evidence it works. My understanding has no bearing on whether something is correct or not.

Personal opinion is fine, as long as you are open to have that personal opinion questioned. If you can't defend that opinion, then keep it to yourself, or accept you may be wrong. The idea that the purpose of inclusive language is "wrong" is nonsensical, and would only be said by someone that the current language structure didn't exclude.

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Roundtuit  
#39 Posted : 02 June 2021 14:05:57(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

The concept of wrong will arise from the inner conflict experienced from 50+ years of societal conditioning in the "norms" that are the binary system. A matter modern revolutionaries forget evolved over millenia.

Roundtuit  
#40 Posted : 02 June 2021 14:05:57(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Roundtuit

The concept of wrong will arise from the inner conflict experienced from 50+ years of societal conditioning in the "norms" that are the binary system. A matter modern revolutionaries forget evolved over millenia.

peter gotch  
#41 Posted : 02 June 2021 14:28:36(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

I suppose that it is inevitable that some on these Forums would consider the MP dubbed "Honourable Member for the 18th Century" to be in touch with 21st Century sensibilities, but here we seem to have an alliance of irregular contributors putting in their opinions and "thanks" on a thread that has, by and large been a considered discussion about the fine lines between what is acceptable language in modern times and what is not.

Including one such irregular contributor whose first posting on the Forums was an advert yesterday, in which not only did they promote a company maintaining air con units in Singapore, but also called into question whether air conditioning might have been a contributory factor in the spread of Covid*.

We've had that particular debate (and more) at length on these Forums including interventions by someone who has returned to the fray on this thread. 

*The Singapore Government has made specific recommendations to mitigate precisely this type of risk. guidance-note-on-improving-ventilation-and-indoor-air-quality-in-buildings.pdf (bca.gov.sg) 

Davidfilce  
#42 Posted : 02 June 2021 15:02:12(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
Davidfilce

I would leave things as they are. Irrespective of the "can of worms" someone mentioned, we need to remember that the most important thing in H&S is to make the message clear and as precise as possible. This simply will further muddy the already muddy waters Dave
achrn  
#43 Posted : 03 June 2021 08:48:02(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
achrn

Originally Posted by: DawidGrr Go to Quoted Post

I'm 58yo and don't understand the purpose of gender-neutral wording. It's so wrong.

In the English language pretty much everyone does routinely (and happily) use gender neutral language when they don't know the gender of the person they are referring to.

(Did you see what I did there? Twice.)

There's nothing wrong with gender neutral language.  It doesn't require tortuous grammatical constructs, it simply requires you to not assume you know what sex the individual you are referring to is.

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Kate on 03/06/2021(UTC), Dazzling Puddock on 03/06/2021(UTC), peter gotch on 03/06/2021(UTC)
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